1 / 21

Attributions of Students’ Choice of Academic Majors

Attributions of Students’ Choice of Academic Majors. Evidence from Lebanon By Dr. Kamal Abouchedid. Statement of the problem. There is a lopsided enrollment of students in scholastic majors by gender and social class;

woodards
Télécharger la présentation

Attributions of Students’ Choice of Academic Majors

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Attributions of Students’ Choice of Academic Majors Evidence from Lebanon By Dr. Kamal Abouchedid

  2. Statement of the problem • There is a lopsided enrollment of students in scholastic majors by gender and social class; • Female applicants consistently score higher than males in language and mathematics entrance exams; • Females are under-represented in ‘scientific’ majors, including mathematics and engineering; • 181(74.8%) of those who applied to science majors were males as opposed to 61(25.2%) females, and 34(35.4%) of applicants in the humanities were males as opposed to 62(64.6%) female applicant.

  3. Background of the study: Societal influences on students’ choices • The issue of traditionally demarcated “masculine” versus “feminine” (Abouchedid & Nasser, 2000); • Despite the recent trudge into modernization in parts of the Arab world (Schvaneveldt et. al., 2005), many Arab contexts are still incrusted in patriarchal behavior (Sharabi, 1988; Nadera & Baker, 1997;; Barakat, 1984; Shalhoub-Kevorkian, 2000); • In patriarchal societies like Lebanon (Sharabi, 1988), fathers encourage, if not force their sons to enroll in certain university majors that suit with their profession in order to prepare them to take over the business after retirement; hence perpetuate a patri-lineal family structure (Abouchedid, 2002), where certain professions are transmitted from fathers to their sons within a patriarchal family context.

  4. The divorce between career oriented and the ‘careered’ • Recent figures showed that about 56 per cent of university graduates in Lebanon undertake certain career paths that mismatch with their college majors (Abdul-Reda & Abouchedid, 2003). • The issue of un-decision (moratorium): From our experience, during the last three decades or so, undecided Lebanese school graduates used to enroll in the Law major on a temporary basis until their career paths are crystallized; hence shift to another major; • At present (2007), the majority of students are crowded in business administration majors instead of Law major which became unpopular due to the high rates of unemployed lawyers in Lebanon; • Graduates’ derailment from appropriate career paths is attributed, partly at least, to the lack of school and university plans that provide high school students with sound occupational information, guidance and awareness of their majors and subsequent careers (El-Amine, 2003).

  5. Influences on careers • Since career choices are shaped through the constant interaction of social and cultural contexts and their influence on individuals’ core beliefs about family, society, and gender roles (Minor et al., 1998), attention should be given to the understanding of the influence culture and society have on student choice of majors; • Psychosocial barriers have clear implications on student “choice”.

  6. The career continuum • It is clear from the literature that students’ choice of academic majors represents the first step in their career development path (Tracey & Hopkins, 2001). • Careers are defined as the choices made previously and subsequently that influence occupation or job (Minor e. al., 1998), have focused on three developmental stages of student choice of careers; • These are: (i) career choices in high school (Powell & Luzzo, 1998); (ii) career option during college education (e.g., Feldman & Whitcomb, 2005); and (iii) occupation after graduation (Nasser & Abouchedid, 2005; Abouchedid, 2003); • Within this career-development path continuum, little research has sought to examine high school students’ ‘choice’ of academic majors as part of their early career development path.

  7. Importance of the study • Given of the prevalence of patriarchy in Lebanon (Sharabi, 1998) together with collectivist social behavior (Barakat, 1984; Abouchedid & Nasser, 2001) that wield considerable influence over individuals’ choices, additional systematic research involving high school students is warranted; • Besides, existing research has exclusively focused on college students and adult subjects already enrolled in higher educational institutions (e.g., McBroom, 1985; Powell & Luzzo, 1995), while scarcely studying high school samples before entry to college; hence overlooking an important phase of students’ career development path.

  8. Objective of the study • With an explanatory survey, I investigated Lebanese high school students’ attributions of choice of academic majors since attributions influence subsequent behavior and goal expectations (Crittenden & Wiley, 1980).

  9. Conceptual framework of career studies • Research on student choice of majors has employed either psychological or sociological constructs; • Sociological constructs recognize the influence of the social context on career decisions such as political and social trends (Barling et al., 1998), socialization, gender roles, life experiences (Abouchedid & Nasser, 2000) and the role of institutional practices that encourage the enrollment of certain groups in specific majors (Pritchard et. al., 2004); • On the other hand, studies that employ psychological constructs incorporate cognitive dimensions such as career maturity and decision-making skills (Crites, 1971), i.e., the ability of students to make informed age-appropriate choice regarding their careers (Savickas, 1984; Luzzo, 1995).

  10. Attribution research • A plethora of empirical research has emerged over the last four decades spanning over people’s attributions of poverty (Feagin, 1972; Kluegel & Smith, 1986; Abouchedid & Nasser, 2001), the causes of peace (Nasser & Abouhcedid, 2002), attributions of career decision-making (Trice et. al, 1989) and satisfaction (e.g., McCormick & Solman, 1992).

  11. Continued • Studies have routinely yielded three distinct conceptual dimensions for classifying attributions. These are: individualistic, structural or situational, and fatalistic attributions; • Lately, Vermeulen and Minor (1998) proposed a refined attribution taxonomy that can be used to classify attributions in career studies. (1) social and familial context (decisions are influenced by external intervention such as network of contacts and family influences); (2) fatalistic; (3) uncertainty (individuals are uncertain about their decisions); (4) individualistic; and (5) situational institutionally determined strictures.

  12. Hypotheses • H1. Given the influence of structuralism on Lebanon’s collectivist culture (Sharabi, 1988), students will attribute the choice of their majors to structural reasons (i.e., family influences and institutions) more than to individual or fatalistic ones. • H2. In light of previous studies (e.g., Feldman & Whitcomb, 2005) gender and parents’ education will predict differences in student attributions of choice of major because differences on these variables are reflective in different life experiences and patterns of socialization (Berryman, 1983).

  13. Method • Sample A sample of high school students (n = 648) taking their entrance exams at a Lebanese private university participated in the study The mean age was 18.2, which is the typical mean age of first year university students in Lebanon.

  14. Sample (continued) • Within majors, the number of males compared to females applying to engineering was startling; 122 (90%) males as compared to 12 (9%) females applied to engineering. • Females were under-represented in scientific majors such as computer science and mathematics.

  15. Questionnaire • The questionnaire was composed of two sections. The first section requested students to report their SES; • The second section had 21 items about the reasons that students believe have influenced the choice of their majors along a 5-point Likert scale that ranged from (1) strongly disagree to (2) strongly agree and (3) as the neutral point.

  16. Analyses • In order to examine the factor structure of the 21 items, a VARIMAX principal component factor analysis with units in the diagonal, an eigen cut- off value of 1.0 was executed. • Results yielded five factor dimensions which explained 52% of the variance in the data. • Due to the low communalities of the fifth factor, it was eliminated from the analyses but not from descriptive statistics.

  17. Factor analysis results • Uncertainty was the first factor; • Individualism; • Situational; • Fatalistic.

  18. Regression • Step-wise multiple regression analysis was used; • Fathers’ and mothers’ educational levels and gender variables were regressed onto the four-factor dimensions.

  19. Results • Fathers’ educational attainment level was the sole variable entered into the model. The results indicated that fathers’ educational attainment level predicted students’ uncertainty with (F(1,595) = 7.18; p < .05; • students from fathers with low educational attainment levels were significantly uncertain about choosing their majors more than those from highly educated fathers. • the gender variable was entered into the first model of the regression equation followed by fathers’ educational attainment level in the second model. Students, particularly females from highly educated fathers were significantly (F(1,596) = 14.55; p < 0.01 the most individualistic in their attributions of choice of major. • The third analysis had fathers’ education entered into the first model followed by gender in the second model. Males from low educated fathers were more likely to attribute the choice of their majors to family context influences with (F(1,591) = 14.29; p < 0.01. The fourth analysis showed that fathers’ education level predicted significantly students’ attributions of choice of major to fatalistic reasons such as luck and fortune with (F(1,600) = 5.71; p < .05; students from fathers with low levels of education were the most fatalistic.

  20. Recommendations • Career guidance that would educate about de-gendering behavior among youth; • De-emphasize dogma and patriarchal behavior; • Assess student attributions as part of diagnostic assessment.

  21. Epilogue • Bernstein said that education cannot compensate for society. Research shows that education can make a change. We should believe in this later but should not forget Bernstein’s wisdom.

More Related